The absolute lowest temperature possible is -273.15 degrees Celsius. It is never possible to cool any object exactly to this temperature – one can only approach absolute zero. This is the third law of ...
In a new publication, Professor José-María Martín-Olalla, from the Department of Condensed Matter Physics at the University of Seville, has described the direct link between the vanishing of specific ...
Developing technology that allows quantum information to be both stable and accessible is a critical challenge in the development of useful quantum computers that operate at scale. Research published ...
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Breakthrough Qubit Control Near Absolute Zero Is Scalability Game-Changer For Quantum Computing
Quantum computers have the capability to revolutionize how we model and compute things in the world. They can do things that not even the most advanced supercomputers can do. We do not have such a ...
The next free Wizards show is coming up in January 2024, when CU Physics Professor Paul Beale presents a program that family audiences absolutely love! CU Professor of Physics, award winning teacher ...
Andrew Dzurak works at Diraq. Through Diraq, he receives funding from Australian Research Council (ARC), UNSW Sydney, US Army Research Office (ARO), the US Air Force Office of Scientific Research ...
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How would you go about determining absolute zero? Intuitively, it seems like you’d need some complicated physics setup with lasers and maybe some liquid helium. But as it turns out, all you need is ...
A new type of cooling relies on an exotic quantum mechanical property rather than putting objects into cold environments like refrigerators – and it might one day help us chill things to temperatures ...
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How would you go about determining absolute zero? Intuitively, it seems like you’d need some complicated physics setup with lasers and maybe some liquid helium. But as it turns out, all you need is ...
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